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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Prone with a bipod Vs Bench with a front rest
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<blockquote data-quote="Firearrow" data-source="post: 1227787" data-attributes="member: 18733"><p>Thanks for the replys everyone. I mainly ask this because I am working up a load for my new .260, and what I have found is that I have two charge weights that will produce a 0.6 MOA group, Edge to Edge, at 200 yards string after string. When I did my COAL test I was hoping I would be landing on something around 0.5, but was still around 0.6 MOA. Every once in a while when the SHOOTER did his part I did get at or just a touch under 0.5, but not as consistently as I wanted. </p><p></p><p>I know at this point it is more the shooter, than the charge weight or COAL. I was just wondering if it would be worth my time to get up off the ground and do some benchrest style shooting to see what my rifle is really doing, minus the shooter input, with the different charge weights and COAL's. </p><p></p><p>I know the only way to truly tell is by trial and error.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Firearrow, post: 1227787, member: 18733"] Thanks for the replys everyone. I mainly ask this because I am working up a load for my new .260, and what I have found is that I have two charge weights that will produce a 0.6 MOA group, Edge to Edge, at 200 yards string after string. When I did my COAL test I was hoping I would be landing on something around 0.5, but was still around 0.6 MOA. Every once in a while when the SHOOTER did his part I did get at or just a touch under 0.5, but not as consistently as I wanted. I know at this point it is more the shooter, than the charge weight or COAL. I was just wondering if it would be worth my time to get up off the ground and do some benchrest style shooting to see what my rifle is really doing, minus the shooter input, with the different charge weights and COAL's. I know the only way to truly tell is by trial and error. [/QUOTE]
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Prone with a bipod Vs Bench with a front rest
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